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12 Lead ECGs: Ischemia, Injury & Infarction

12 Lead ECGs: Ischemia, Injury & Infarction. Terry White, RN, EMT-P. Ischemia, Injury & Infarction. Definitions Injury/Infarct Recognition Localization & Evolution Reciprocal Changes The High Acuity Patient. The Three I’s. Ischemia lack of oxygenation

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12 Lead ECGs: Ischemia, Injury & Infarction

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  1. 12 Lead ECGs: Ischemia, Injury & Infarction Terry White, RN, EMT-P

  2. Ischemia, Injury & Infarction • Definitions • Injury/Infarct Recognition • Localization & Evolution • Reciprocal Changes • The High Acuity Patient

  3. The Three I’s • Ischemia • lack of oxygenation • ST segment depression or T wave inversion • Injury • prolonged ischemia • ST segment elevation • Infarct • death of tissue • may or may not show a Q wave

  4. Injury/Infarct Recognition Well Perfused Myocardium Epicardial Coronary Artery Lateral Wall of LV Septum Positive Electrode Interior Wall of LV

  5. Injury/Infarct Recognition Normal ECG

  6. Injury/Infarct Recognition Ischemia Epicardial Coronary Artery Lateral Wall of LV Left Ventricular Cavity Septum Positive Electrode Interior Wall of LV

  7. Injury/Infarct Recognition • Ischemia • Inadequate oxygen to tissue • Represented by ST depression or T inversion • May or may not result in infarct or Q waves

  8. Injury/Infarct Recognition ST Segment Depression

  9. Injury/Infarct Recognition Injury Thrombus Ischemia

  10. Injury/Infarct Recognition • Injury • Prolonged ischemia • Represented by ST elevation • referred to as an “injury pattern” • Usually results in infarct • may or may not develop Q wave

  11. Injury/Infarct Recognition ST Segment Elevation

  12. Injury/Infarct Recognition Infarct Infarcted Area Electrically Silent Depolarization

  13. Injury/Infarct Recognition • Infarct • Death of tissue • Represented by Q wave • Not all infarcts develop Q waves

  14. Injury/Infarct Recognition Q Waves

  15. Injury/Infarct Recognition Thrombus Infarcted Area Electrically Silent Ischemia Depolarization

  16. Injury/Infarct Recognition • What to Look for: • ST segment elevation • Present in two or more anatomically contiguous leads

  17. Injury/Infarct Recognition: Practice

  18. I II III aVR aVL aVF V1 V2 V3 V4 V5 V6 Localization Inferior: II, III, AVF Septal: V1, V2 Anterior: V3, V4 Lateral: I, AVL, V5, V6

  19. Localization Which coronary arteries are most likely associated with each group of contiguous leads? I Lateral aVR V1 Septal V4 Anterior II Inferior aVL Lateral V2 Septal V5 Lateral III Inferior aVF Inferior V3 Anterior V6 Lateral

  20. Localization: Left Coronary Artery Left Main Right Coronary Artery Left Circumflex Right Ventricle Lateral Wall Septal Wall Anterior Wall of Left Ventricle Anterior Descending Artery

  21. Localization: Left Coronary Artery (LCA) • Left Main (proximal LCA) occlusion • Extensive Anterior injury • Left Circumflex (LCX) occlusion • Lateral injury • Left Anterior Descending (LAD) occlusion • Anteroseptal injury

  22. Localization Practice ECG

  23. Localization Practice ECG

  24. Localization Practice ECG

  25. Localization: Extensive Anterior MI • Evidence in septal, anterior, and lateral leads • Often from proximal LCA lesion • “Widow Maker” • Complications common • Left ventricular failure • CHF / Pulmonary Edema • Cardiogenic Shock

  26. Localization: Definitive Therapy for Extensive AWMI • Normal blood pressure • Thrombolysis may be indicated • Signs of shock • PTCA • CABG

  27. Localization: LCA Occlusions • Other considerations • Bundle branches supplied by LCA • Serious infranodal heart block may occur

  28. Localization: Right Coronary Artery Left Coronary Artery Right Coronary Artery Lateral Wall Posterior Descending Artery Left Ventricle Posterior Wall Inferior Wall of left ventricle

  29. Localization: Right Coronary Artery (RCA) • Proximal RCA occlusion • Right Ventricle injured • Posterior wall of left ventricle injured • Inferior wall of left ventricle injured • Posterior descending artery (PDA) occlusion • Inferior wall of right ventricle injured

  30. Localization Practice ECG

  31. Localization: Proximal RCA Occlusion • Right Ventricular Infarct (RVI) • 12-lead ECG does not view right ventricle • Use additional leads • V3R - V6R • V4R • Right precordial leads • same anatomical landmarks as on left for V3 - V6 but placed on the right side

  32. Localization Practice ECG Note: “R” designation manually placed on this ECG for teaching purposes

  33. Localization: ECG Evidence of RVI • Inferior MI (always suspect RVI) • Look for ST elevation in right-sided V leads (V3-V6)

  34. Localization: Physical Evidence of RVI • Dyspnea with clear lungs • Jugular vein distension • Hypotension • Relative or absolute

  35. Localization: Treatment for RVI • Use caution with vasodilators • Small incremental doses of MS • NTG by drip • Treat hypotension with fluid • One to two liters may be required • Large bore IV lines

  36. Localization: Posterior Wall MI (PWMI) • Usually extension of an inferior or lateral MI • Posterior wall receives blood from RCA & LCA • Common with proximal RCA occlusions • Occurs with LCX occlusions • Identified by reciprocal changes in V1-V4 • May also use Posterior leads to identify • V7: posterior axillary line level with V6 • V8: mid-scapular line level with V6 • V9: left para-vertebral level with V6

  37. Localization Practice ECG

  38. Localization: Left Coronary Dominance • Approximately 10% of population • LCX connects to posterior descending artery and dominates inferior wall perfusion • In these cases when LCX is occluded, lateral and inferior walls infarct • Inferolateral MI

  39. Localization Practice ECG

  40. Localization Summary • Left Coronary Artery • Septal • Anterior • Lateral • Possibly Inferior • Right Coronary Artery • Inferior • Right Ventricular Infarct • Posterior

  41. Evolution of AMI • Hyperacute • Early change suggestive of AMI • Tall & Peaked • May precede clinical symptoms • Only seen in leads looking at infarcting area • Not used as a diagnostic finding

  42. Evolution of AMI • Acute • ST segment elevation • Implies myocardial injury occurring • Elevated ST segment presumed acute rather than old

  43. Evolution of AMI • Acute • ST segment Elevated • Q wave at least 40 ms wide = pathologic • Q wave associated with some cellular necrosis

  44. Evolution of AMI • Age Undetermined • Wide (pathologic) Q wave • No ST segment elevation • Old or “age undetermined” MI

  45. AMI Recognition A normal 12-lead ECG DOES NOT mean the patient is not having acute ischemia, injury or infarction!!!

  46. Practice

  47. Practice

  48. Practice

  49. Reciprocal Changes

  50. Reciprocal Changes II, III, aVF I, aVL, V leads

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